Office of the Press Secretary
(Hauppauge, New York)
________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release August 28, 1999

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT DNC SAXOPHONE CLUB RECEPTION
East Hampton Airport
East Hampton, New York

11:00 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. First of all, I would like to thank Wyclef
and the band, they were magnificent -- weren't they unbelievable? Let's
give them another hand. (Applause.)

You were up there doing your thing and I was sitting here thinking
about what I was going to say. And I couldn't concentrate for wishing I
was 25 and out there again. (Laughter and applause.) You were
terrific, thank you so much. (Applause.)

I want to thank all the leaders of the Democratic Party who are here.
I want to thank Judith Hope. You know, people always say, well, you
know, Hillary, is she going to run, is she not going to run? Well, she
spent all these years in Arkansas. Judith Hope was 20 years old before
she ever left Arkansas, we're just following her lead. (Laughter and
applause.)

I want to say, also, how very grateful I am to all the members of
Congress -- Senator Lautenberg, Senator Torricelli, Congresswoman
McCarthy and Congressman Forbes for being here. I think it says a lot
about Long Island, and the state of New York, that the two most
prominent people to switch from the Republican to the Democratic Party
in the last couple of years are Carolyn McCarthy and Michael Forbes from
Long Island. (Applause.)

One switched -- you know, we're having a good time tonight, so nobody
wants to talk too much about issues, but Michael Forbes switched because
the Republicans are killing the patients' bill of rights, and patients
are getting the shaft out there in the health care system all across
America -- (applause) -- and because they have a budget and tax plan
which will cut education spending when we should be investing more in
the education of our children. (Applause.)

And Carolyn McCarthy quit because after her intense personal agony, she
just got sick and tired of their leadership killing common-sense things
like closing the loophole that stops us from doing background checks
when criminals buy guns at gun shows and flea markets, and it's wrong.
(Applause.)

And I say that to make this point: I am so profoundly grateful to the
people of New York for being so good to me and Hillary and to Al and
Tipper Gore and two presidential elections and one magnificent
convention and one very bracing primary in 1992. The people of New York
have been good to me and have made it possible for us to do what we have
worked hard to do in the last six and a half years.

And I want you to think about just a couple of things, especially the
younger people here. I'm not running for anything. (Laughter.) I kind
of hate it, actually -- I wish I still could, but I can't. (Laughter
and applause.) But I have worked all my life to try to bring people
together and move people forward and bring out the best in people. And
when New York took a chance on me and Al Gore in 1992, that's exactly
what it was. We said, vote for us, we'll take the country in a
different direction. We'll ask the Democrats to be for fiscal
responsibility and bringing the crime rate down and changing the welfare
culture and having a humane trade policy. And we'll ask the Republicans
to stop bad-mouthing the government and dividing people by race and
gender and sexual orientation and other things. And we'll try to bring
this country together and move it forward. (Applause.)

But you couldn't know you took a chance. And we've been down there
working for six and half years now. And the first point I want to make
is, you're not taking a chance anymore. You know we have the longest
peacetime expansion in history; the highest homeownership in history;
the lowest minority unemployment in history; the lowest crime rate in 26
years; the lowest welfare rolls in 32 years. This country is moving in
the right direction. You took a chance, and you were right, and the
Democratic Party has moved this country forward. (Applause.)

The second thing I want to say is -- even more important -- is that we
just made the country work again. But there are huge questions facing
the 21st century. The number of people over 65 will double in 30 years.
We already have the largest number of children in school in history --
for the first time, a group bigger than the baby boomers, and they are
far, far more diverse; many more of their first languages are not
English. And that is a godsend in this great, rich, textured global
economy.

But it means we have no business, at this point of maximum prosperity
and confidence, walking away from the big challenges. How are we going
to save Medicare and Social Security, so that the children of the baby
boomers don't have to support their parents, and can support their kids
instead? (Applause.)

How are we going to give every child in this country a world-class
education? How are we going to bring the economic opportunity that so
many of you have enjoyed to all the little towns in upstate New York,
and all the neighborhoods in the inner cities, and the Mississippi
Delta, and the Indian reservations, to people who haven't had it?

And before we go back to the failed economic policies of the past, and
pass a tax cut that will force us to cut education, and cut the
environment, and cut our investment in the future, and put us right back
in the hole we were in, and raise your interest rates, and take your tax
cut away from you, let's get this country out of debt for the first time
since 1835, and give the children here a generation of economic
prosperity. (Applause.)

Now, these are big issues. But it's not like 1992. We're not asking
you to take us on faith anymore. We're asking you to go with what you
know works, in your mind and in your heart.

And the last point I want to make is this: if I could wave a magic
wand and get America just to do one thing -- just one -- it wouldn't
even be all the things I just said. I would have the American people
lay down their hatreds and their division, their anger and their
pettiness, their legitimate grievances and their phonied-up gripes. I
would have this country no longer divided by race, by religion, by
sexual orientation, by politics, by region.

You know, most of the people I've known in public service over 25
years, now, have been honest, decent, hardworking people who tried to do
what they thought was right. And this is crazy, what the leadership of
the Congress has tried to do in Washington these last few years --
trying to keep the country in a turmoil all the time, all torn up and
upset, telling everybody how terrible their enemies are, trying to make
sure you could divide the population up, first one way and then another,
and then being in the grip of these interest groups that are keeping us
from becoming one community, by doing things we know we ought to do in
education, on the patients' bill of rights, on sensible gun control
measures. This is wrong.

You think of all the time I have spent trying to make peace in the
Middle East, end tribal wars in Africa, stop the slaughter in Bosnia and
Kosovo, bring peace to Northern Ireland -- all these things. What is at
the root of all this? People believing that the only way they can get
and keep power is to turn people against one another, to harden their
hearts.

And I'm telling you, the Democratic Party stands for opportunity, for
facing the big challenges of the future, and for one American community
where we are united by our common humanity. (Applause.)

So I am grateful for all those who have joined our cause, because they
share our values and our ideas, and they know the record is
incontestable. Congressman Forbes took a big chance doing what he did.
I wish he had done it a year or two earlier. (Laughter.) But I was
raised a Southern Baptist; we believe in deathbed conversions, and he is
a long way from the deathbed. So you all give him another hand for
doing the right thing. (Applause.) Congresswoman Carolyn McCarthy has
changed this country for the better, and immeasurably enriched our party
in the Congress because of what she did. (Applause.)

And I will say, as I've said many times, of all the hundreds -- indeed,
all the thousands -- of the people I have known, the woman I have shared
the last -- well, since we met -- 27 years with is the most passionate,
the most committed, the most able, the most consistent public citizen I
have ever known, and New York would do well to send her to the United
States Senate. (Applause.)

So I thank you. I'm not running for anything. I'm going to work hard
for you for another year and a half. (Applause.) I am grateful that
this country is in the shape it's in. I am proud of the friendship and
partnership I've shared with Al Gore, the friendship and partnerships
I've shared with the members of Congress. But, most important, I am
humble and grateful for the kind of support that the people of New York
have given. (Applause.) And all I ask you in return is to keep on
going in this direction. You were right when you took a chance on us in
1992. You were right when you ratified what we were doing in 1996. You
were right to send Chuck Schumer to the Senate in 1998. Just stay on,
keep leading America into a new century.